The evolution of galaxy star formation activity in massive halos
P. Popesso, A. Biviano, A. Finoguenov, D. Wilman, M. Salvato, B., Magnelli, C. Gruppioni, F. Pozzi, G. Rodighiero, F. Ziparo, S. Berta, D., Elbaz, M.Dickinson, D. Lutz, B. Altieri, H. Aussel, A. Cimatti, D. Fadda, O., Ilbert, E. Le Floch, R. Nordon, A. Poglitsch, C.K. Xu

TL;DR
This study investigates how galaxy star formation activity in massive halos evolves over time, revealing that environment and halo mass significantly influence the cosmic star formation history, especially at redshifts above 1.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence supporting the halo downsizing scenario by analyzing IR luminosity functions of group galaxies from redshift 0 to 1.6.
Findings
IR-luminous galaxies in groups are more common at z~1.
Group galaxies contribute 60-80% to the CSFH at z>1.
Star formation in group galaxies declines faster below z~1.
Abstract
There is now a large consensus that the current epoch of the Cosmic Star Formation History (CSFH) is dominated by low mass galaxies while the most active phase at 1<z<2 is dominated by more massive galaxies, which undergo a faster evolution. Massive galaxies tend to inhabit very massive halos such as galaxy groups and clusters. We aim to understand whether the observed "galaxy downsizing" could be interpreted as a "halo downsizing", whereas the most massive halos, and their galaxy populations, evolve more rapidly than the halos of lower mass. Thus, we study the contribution to the CSFH of galaxies inhabiting group-sized halos. This is done through the study of the evolution of the Infra-Red (IR) luminosity function of group galaxies from redshift 0 to ~1.6. We use a sample of 39 X-ray selected groups in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (ECDFS), the Chandra Deep Field North (CDFN),…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
